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Why does this regex pattern fail to match the groups in Java. When I run the same example with in a bash shell with echo and sed it works.

String s = "Match foo and bar and baz";
//Pattern p = Pattern.compile("Match (.*) or (.*) or (.*)"); //was a typo
Pattern p = Pattern.compile("Match (.*) and (.*) and (.*)");
Matcher m = p.matcher(s);
while (m.find()) {
    System.out.println(m.group(1));
}

I am expecting to match foo, bar, and baz.

$ echo "Match foo and bar and baz" | sed 's/Match \(.*\) and \(.*\) and \(.*\)/\1, \2, \3/'
foo, bar, baz
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4 Answers 4

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It is due to greedy nature of .*. You can use this regex:

Pattern p = Pattern.compile("Match (\\S+) and (\\S+) and (\\S+)");

Here this regex is using \\S+ which means match 1 or more non-spaces.

Full code

Matcher m = p.matcher(s);
while (m.find()) {
    System.out.println(m.group(1) + ", " + m.group(2) + ", " + m.group(3));
}
6
  • Same as my code original code this outputs: foo on my system and then the program terminates. If you are sure that your example works, then I would say my Java runtime has a problem. So are you sure the example is correct?
    – lanoxx
    Apr 24, 2014 at 16:44
  • I see my mistake. Seems I just take a break from coding. Thanks a lot. But in this case it also works with (.*), so it was not a greedy problem.
    – lanoxx
    Apr 24, 2014 at 16:48
  • .* might work for this case but I recommend not using for 2 reasons 1. It is very inefficient and slow 2. It may grab more than you think it should grab
    – anubhava
    Apr 24, 2014 at 16:51
  • You are right, my example was a simplified one in which both solutions work. But in the actual code I had to use \\S+.
    – lanoxx
    Apr 24, 2014 at 16:52
  • @ajb: Read all comments here, OP's example was a over simplified one.
    – anubhava
    Apr 24, 2014 at 17:00
1

You're trying to match the whole String, so

while (m.find()) {

will only iterate once.

That single find() will capture all the groups. As such, you can print them out as

System.out.println(m.group(1) + " " + m.group(2) + m.group(3));

Or use a for loop over the Matcher#groupCount().

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1

Your regex is correct, but you need to print the different groups and not only the 1st, ex:

while (m.find()) {
    System.out.println(m.group(1));
    System.out.println(m.group(2));
    System.out.println(m.group(3));
}
0

It seems like a simple typo (or -> and):

Pattern p = Pattern.compile("Match (.*) and (.*) and (.*)");

UPDATE

To replace:

String s = "Match foo and bar and baz";
String replaced = s.replaceAll("Match (.*) and (.*) and (.*)", "$1, $2, $3");
System.out.println(replaced);
1
  • ah that was a typo, but your example also does not work
    – lanoxx
    Apr 24, 2014 at 16:41

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